Apparatus for resistance welding fins to the interior surfaces of tubes



May 1, 1951 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Original Filed Aug. 31,

INVENTOR. JOHN w BROWN, JR.

ATTORNEYS May 1, 1951 .1. w. BROWN, JR 2,550,965

APPARATUS FOR RESISTANCE WELDING FINS TO THE INTERIOR SURFACES OF TUBES Original Filed Aug 31, 1946 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR.

JOHN w. BlaowuJa BY lfmzfwwial iatented May 1, 1951 APPARATUS FOR RESISTANCE WEiDING FINS TO THE INTERIOR SURFACES OF TUBES John W. Brown, Jr., Lakewood, Ohio, assignor to Brown Fintube Company, Elyria, Ohio, a corporation of Ohio Original application August 31, 1946, Serial No.

694,227, now Patent No. 2,483,454, dated October 4, 1949. Divided and this application May 27, 1949, Serial No. 95,764

7 Claims.

This invention relates to an apparatus for attaching metallic heat conducting fin members to the interior of metal tubes for producing internally finned tubes adapted particularly for use as heat exchanger conduits. This application is a division of my co-pending application Serial No. 694,227, filed August 31, 1946, now Patent No. 2,483,454, issued October 4, 1949, which is directed to a method of welding in which the presently disclosed apparatus is particularly useful.

In the manufacture of heat exchangers of various types, it is desirable to increase the area of the fluid conducting tubes or conduits by securing fins of various types to the interior of the tubes. In order to insure proper paths for the flow of heat between the fin members and the walls of the tubes themselves, it is desirable that the fin members be welded to the tubes to provide a continuous metallic path for the conduction of heat. Resistance welds securing the bases of the fin members to the tubes are especially advantageous, but the resistance welding of fins to the interior of tubes and particularly tubes of comparatively small diameter presents difiiculties because the tubes are too small to receive electrodes of the type ordinarily employed in conventional resistance welding machines.

A general object of the present invention is the provision of an apparatus for rapidly and economically welding fins to the inside of tubes without requiring expensive special equipment, the tubes and fins preferably being composed of ferrous material. Another object is the provision of tubes having highly desirable characteristics from a heat exchange standpoint. A further object is to provide an apparatus for welding fins to the inside of tubes in which the resiliency of the tube wall and its tendency to retain a given shape when distorted within its elastic limit is used to hold the fins and tube in intimate contact during a welding operation. An additional object is to provide an apparatus in which a tube is retained in a flexed or distorted shape by an assembly including a spacing conductor bar and a fin or fins that in overall width are slightly greater than the normal internal diameter of the tube, the tube resiliently gripping the fin or fins and the spacing conductor during the subsequent welding operation. A still further object is to weld fins to the inside of a tube by passing a welding current through the fins and a connecting conductor bar from one side of the tube to the other rather than around the tube wall from one side to the other.

Preferably I accomplish the above and other objects of the invention by providing a tube of such light gauge with respect to its diameter that the current path around the tube between two diametrically opposed points thereon will have substantial resistance. Within such a tube I position a pair of fin members, for example, U-channel section members, with their axes extending substantially parallel to the axis of the tube and with the bases ofthe fin members engaging diametrically opposite inner surfaces of the tube. Between the bases of the fin members, I position a conductor bar or mandrel composed of a highly conductive metal such as copper, and having a thickness such that it will fit within and engage the bases of the channel section fin members. The total of the width of the conductor bar at the time of the welding operation and the thickness of the bases of the fins makes an assembly that is slightly greater than the internal diameter of the tube in which it is to be mounted. The resiliency of the tube is such that it clamps the fin or fins, the spacing conductor bar, and itself together with a pressure that permits properly welding the fin base or bases to the tube. The conductor bar preferably is as long as the fin members to be welded to the tube. The conductor bar is expandable after it and the fins are placed in an unfiexed tube to clamp the fin bases against the tube by slightly flexing the latter so its resiliency applies a clamping force, or the tube may be flexed to increase its diameter in one direction before the conductor bar is inserted.

The welding operation is carried out by guiding the tube with the assembly of fin members and conductor bar through a suitable welding machine, preferably of the type embodying roller electrodes, by means of a jig or the like engaging the tube somewhat in the manner described and illustrated in my Patent No. 2,298,249, issued October 6, 1942. Pressure is exerted by the welding rolls against the exterior of the tube in the zone just outside the zones of engagement of the fin members with the interior of the tube in sufiicient amount to provide proper welding pressure between the tube and rolls. Sufficient force is applied between the rolls and the rigid conductor bar to produce the proper welding pressure between the inner surface of the tube and the bases of the fin members in the zone where the electrodes engage the exterior of the tube. Current is caused to fiow in the usual manner between the electrodes, an intermittent, alternating current controlled by a control of the thyratron type preferably being employed, and simultaneously the assembly of tube, fin members, and conductor bar is moved with respect to the electrodes to produce a series of resistance welded areas securely joining the bases of the fin members and the inner surfaces of the tube. Preferably, the timing and the speed of movement are correlated with the width of the electrode rolls and the conductor bar and the thickness of the fin members to produce welded areas of the type described and claimed in my Patent No. 2,261,137, issued November 4., 1941, thereby insuring the joining of fin members to the tube by paths which are of sufficient area to provide for the efficient transfer of heat between the fin members and the tube.

In such an operation, the flow of current between the two electrodes is divided between the paths around the circumference of the tube and the path through the bases of the fin members and the intervening conductor bar and it would appear that it would be impossible or at least impractical to produce satisfactory welds under such conditions. However, I have discovered that by controlling the resistance of the tube itself, the welding operation can be carried out wi.hout difficulty. Thus, in order to prevent excessive loss of current and to make possible the carrying out of the operation without burning th exterior of the tube where it comes in con-act with the electrode, the gauge of the metal of the tube preferably should be as thin as possible, consistent with the requirements for the services to which the tube is to be put. The resistance of the path around the tube between the electrodes increases with the diameter of the tube and is reduced with an increase in thickness of the wall of the tube. In the tube as great a resistance as possible is desirable. The conductor bar extending between the bases of the fin members may be made of a highly conductive material and of such thickness that its resistance is negligible while the resistance of th tube itself must be maintained at a substantial value. For example, with a tube of small diameter, i. e., about threequarters of an inch, the wall thickness of the tube preferably should not exceed .020 inch.

With a larger tube, for example, four inches in diameter, a wall thickness as great as three thirty-seconds of an inch may be employed. The

nature of the materials also has an effect on the size of tube with which my method can be carried out. Generall speaking, I prefer to employ tubes composed of ferrous materials, for their resistance is substantially greater than the resistance of the copper mandrel 'bar employed within the tube. Stainless steels have greater electrical resistance than ordinary low carbon steels, and thus for a given diameter, the welding operation can be carried out with a greater tube wall thickness for stainless steel tubes than is possible with tubes of ordinary low carbon sleel.

Referring now to the drawings: Figure 1 is a perspective of a preferred form of an internally finned tube made according to my invention; Figure 2 is a perspective illustrating the tube in position between a pai of flexing dies; Figure 3 is a perspective showing the flexed tube with the conductor bar and fins in position; Figure 4. is an end elevation showing a tube positioned between the welding electrodes; Figure 5 is a plan view, partially in section, illustrating the longitudinal relation of the parts during the welding operation; Figure 6 is a View similar to Figure3 showing a tubular member flexed to receiv a cruciform shaped conductor bar; Figure '7 is an end elevation similar to Figure 4 showing an assembly with an expandable conductor bar; and Figure 8 is a plan View, partially in section, as indicated by the line 88 on Figure '7, illustrating the longitudinal relation of the parts during the Welding operation.

As shown in Figure 1, a tube embodying my invention may comprise a tube IE] having a plurality of channel section fin members ll welded to the interior thereof in diametrically opposite pairs. Each fin member comprises a bas portion l2 from which project flanges I l. The base portion of each fin member is welded to the interior of the tube by a series of welded areas l5 and the flanges project inwardly from the 'base portion providing the tube with the desired extended surface for increasing the rate of heat transfer between a commondity flowing within the tube and the tube itself. The fin members preferably extend substantiall parallel to the axis of the tube as shown and thus offer little resistance to the flow of fluid through the tube. The tube may be of any reasonable diameter and length, my apparatus being adapted to the production of lengths of tube several feet long. While the apparatus may be employed with tubes of relatively large diameter, it finds its greatest value in the production of tubes of small diameter, for example, from three-quarters of an inch Or less to five or six inches, i. e., tubes within which-it is impractical to use an ordinary welding electrode.

The use of one form of my apparatus is illustrated somewhat diagrammatically in Figures 2 through 5 inclusive. As shown in Figure 2, the first s.ep is to position a tube in between a pair of flexing dies I? and it by which to increase, within the elastic limit of the tube, the dimension of the tube along one diameter. This is accomplished by moving the flexing dies toward each other so the surfaces Ila and Ida and the surfaces ill) and i817 move closer to each other and slightly compress the tube. The result of this motion of the dies is to decrease the diametrical dimensions of the tube along two planes at substantially right angles to each other and extending between the points of contact of the tube with the die surfaces l'la-Ifla and lib-Nib. The deformation of the tube causes its dimension along a, diameter indicated by the dotted line in Figure 2 to increase slightly to a size sufficient to receive an assembly of conductor bar 20 and a pair of fins H whose assembled width is slightly in excess of the normal internal diameter of the tube.

Th two channel-shaped fin members H are positioned along opposite edges of a copper conductor bar 20 as shown in Figures 3 and 4 and by it are held with their base portions [2 in engagement with substantially diametricall opposite portions of the interior surface of the tube. The conductor bar has sufficient thickness to provide a current path that is of substantially less electrical resistance than the semi-circular paths from one side of the tube to the other through the tube itself. This is to insure that substantially all of the welding current will pass through the bases 12 of the fins and substantially none around the annulus of the tube.

The total width of the assembled conductor bar and the two base portions [2 of the fins II is slightly greater than the normal internal diameter of the tube and this assembly may be inserted readily within the tube by virtue of the flexing operation accomplished by the dies l1 and 18. After the assembly has been inserted in place within the tube, the dies are retracted and the tube I is permitted to resume its original shape insofar as it is permitted to do so by the oversize assembly of fins and conductor bar. The resiliency of the tube will cause it to clamp tightly together the tube and the aforesaid assembly preparatory to application of a welding current. 1

Although the fins have been described as channel shaped it will be apparent that they may take other forms and instead of being U-shaped may be L-shaped. Similarly it is not essential to the invention that a fin be held on each side of the conductor bar. If desired, only one fin need be used in the assembly with the conductor bar so long as the overall width of the conductor bar added to the thickness of the fin base is slightly greater than the internal diameter of the tube 10.

After an assembly comprising a tube, fin members and conductor bar is completed as described above, it is positioned in a suitable welding machine which is not entirely illustrated herein, but which may be of conventional construction, embodying a pair of electrode rolls 22 and 23 (Figure 4). The machine is provided with a suitable source of current, suitable controls such as thyratron controls and suitable means for urging the electrode rolls toward each other to create the desired welding pressure. All of these features are well known in th art and will not be described further herein.

In addition to the conventional features, the machine is preferably also provided with guide rolls such as the pairs of rolls 25 and 26 (Figure 4) arranged to guide the tube through the machine and center it with respect to the welding rolls. The rolls hold the tube in proper position during its progress through the machine, and the fin members are retained in proper position by reason of the conductor bar 20 and the pressure of the somewhat distorted tube I0 as supplemented if desired by the pressure of the rolls 22 and 23. retained in proper position for welding.

The welding operation is carried out by applying the requisite welding pressure through urging of the electrode rolls 22 and 23 toward each other. The current, controlled in the usual manner, is turned on, and the assembly progressed through the tube preferably by driving the electrode rolls themselves in the usual manner. The welding current thereupon flows from one electrode roll through the wall of the tube in a radial direction into the base I2 of one of the fin members, thence through the conductor 20 to the base l2 of the opposite fin member, through the wall of the tube on the opposite side and to the opposite electrode. The heating effect of the current is at the points of high resistance, where the bases of the fin members contact the inner surfaces of the tube, resulting in the simultaneous production of two welded areas l between the inner tube Wall and respective fin bases l2.

Some part of the current fiows around the circumference of the tube as explained above. However, the resistance of the wall of the tube is such that sufiicient current can be caused to flow through the intermediate conductor 20 successfully to weld the fin bases to the interior of the tube, provided that the thickness and diameter of the tube are proportioned as described above. The weld is preferably produced by alternating current controlled in the manner described in By this means all of the parts are my prior Patent No. 2,261,187 aforesaid to produce a series of Welded areas which may be either overlapping or closely spaced, the arrangement, however, being such as to give the desired area for the conduction of heat in the manner described in my said patent. After one pair of fins has been welded to the interior of the tube,- a succeeding pair of fins may be welded to the interior thereof, the operations being repeated until the desired number of welds and pairs of fins are provided.

The determination of appropriate welding con' ditions for tubes of various sizes and gauges and fin members of various sizes and gauges may require some experimentation. However, such experimentation is well within the ability of the ordinary person skilled in the welding art, provided that he is guided by the principles disclosed herein. The welding currents must be somewhat greater than those ordinarily employed, because part of the current flowing between the electrodes is ineffective insofar as the welding is concerned, as it merely flows around the circumference of the tube. The following examples of successful welding practices will serve to guide those skilled in the art in practicing my invention.

Steel fins having a thickness of one-hundredth of an inch were welded to the interior of a tube of 20 gauge steel stock with an outside diameter of one inch, using a copper conductor bar oneeighth of an inch thick. The electrodes were one-eighth of an inch wide and eight inches in diameter. The electrode pressure was approximately 1100 pounds. The welding was carried out with 60 cycle alternating current with an effective amperage of approximately 8000 amperes at about siX to eight volts. The current was thyratron controlled to flow during welding for two cycles after which the current was turned off for a period of five and a half cycles. The, assembly of tube and fin members was progressed through the machine at a speed of approximately six feet per minute, producing a series of welded areas approximately the width of the conductorbar and spaced about five welds per inch.

The description thus far has been concerned with the simultaneous welding of two opposed fins to the inside of a tubular member. It is contemplated that it may be desirable simultaneously to weld more than two such fins in place. Figure 6 illustrates apparatus for practicing the invention when four fins, comprising two pairs spaced degrees apart, are to be positioned in the inside of a tubular member I0 preparatory to welding. Referring to that figure, the conductor bar 20 of Figure 3 now takes the shape of a cruciform 30 in which there are four arms 32 spaced 90 degrees apart. These arms are of equal length and each corresponds substantially in position and length to a radius of the tubular member l0. Each pair of the aligned arms 32 combine in length to exceed by a small amount the normal distance between the inner surfaces of the fin bases l2 when they are positioned within .the tube It] and the latter is undistorted by die members as described below. In this regard the total of the combined conductor width and fin base thickness corresponds to the width of the assembly including the conductor bar 20 previously described that is slightly greater than the internal diameter of the tube. The arms 32 extend the entire length of the fin that is to be welded in place.

To deform the tube l 0 to receive the fins l I and aliases arms 32 of the cruciform 30 four die members 35, 3G, 31 and 38 are provided. As shown in Figure 6 they are mounted for simultaneous movement in pairs in and out along radii that lie 90 degrees apart. In this manner the die members 35 through 38 correspond in their action to the jaws of a four jaw chuck in which two jaws can be moved toward and away from each other and the other two jaws moved on a line 90 degrees from the line of movement of the first jaws and in a similar manner.

The members 35 to 38 may be mounted in any suitabl apparatus for imparting to them the desired movement and for retaining them in the desired position while the assembly consisting of the cruciform 30 and the four internal fins ll mounted thereon is placed in position. This assembly is made while the tube It ,is deformed slightly from a true circle as shown in Figure 6. The deformation is accomplished by moving the members 35 through 38 inwardly to the position shown in that figure and then retaining them in place to flatten the adjacent surfaces of the tube and increase the effective diameter of the surfaces between. After the assembly has been completed the members 35 through 38 are retracted and the tube H] is allowed to resume its original shape except as it is held in a slightly distorted position due to the width of the arms 32.

The assembly of the member 30, the four fin members and the tube It! is then positioned in a suitable welding machine such as that described above. The welding operation may be carried out .in the manner outlined above by causing weld- .ing current to flow in a path from one electrode roll through the adjacent wall of the tube in a radial direction into the base I2 of the adjacent fin member, thence through aligned arms 32 to the base 12 of the opposite fin member, through the adjacent wall of the tube on the opposite side and then to the opposite electrode. During this interval no current passes between the other pair of arms 32. Two opposed fins are welded throughout their length in this manner after which the tube is indexed 90 degrees and the electrode rolls weld the second pair of aligned fins to the tube 10. When this is completed all .four fins are secured in place.

The conductor bar 20 and the cruciform conductor 30 are, in each case, removed from the tube after the welding operation has been completed by placin the tube in the deforming mechanism of Figure 3 or Figure 6 as the case may be and deforming the tube until the conductor may be slid freely through the fin channels and out of the tube. When the tube is then allowed to resume its original shape it will have welded thereto on its interior face two or more fins I I. It will be apparent that the invention is not limited in its scope to applying the number of fins that may be supported within the tube at any one time by the conductor bar 20 or the arms 32. Rather, it is possible to weld into the tube any reasonable number of fins as for instance the eight shown in Figure 1. This is accomplished by merely mounting in the tube in succession, fins, either in pairs as in Figure 3 or in fours as in Figure 6, until the required total number are secured in place. It also should be pointed out that the invention is not limited to the assembly for welding of either two or four fins but that the conductor member may take other shapes than thoseshown to support other numbers of fins.

The two conductor members already described 8 and shown at 20 and 3B are of permanent form and may not be varied in their cross-sectional dimension. In Figures 7 and 8 there is shown a modified form of construction for practicing the invention in which the conductor bar, here indicated at 40, takes the form of an expansible mandrel. In such a construction the conductor member comprises two arms 42 and 43 that at their outer ends engage fin bases 12 as previously described in connection with the conductor bar 20. Inwardly they are shaped as shown in Figure '7 so that the arm 43 has a channel portion 44 extending the length thereof and adapted to receive a tongue portion 45 integral with the arm 42. The tongue and channel construction is to maintain the arms 42 and 43 in aligmnent with each other throughout their length. The members engage with each other along a generally axial surface 47 and are adapted to slide with respect to each other therealong. This surface, as shown in Figure 8, is somewhat inclined with respect to the axis of the tube. Thus as the arms are slid axially of each other in one direction while they are in the tube they increase in their total width and ultimately will force outwardly that portion of the tube with which they are in engagement. When they are moved in the opposite direction their outer edges come closer to each other and may have a total width substantially less than the internal diameter of the tube.

In the latter position described above the expanding conductor bar of Figure 7 is mounted in a tube lb with the fins I I there shown mounted on its outer edges. The conductor bar is then expanded by longitudinal movement of the parts 42 and 4-3 as described above until the tube it] has been deformed a slight amount so that its natural resiliency securely holds the fins l l with the proper pressure for welding. At this time the conductor bar members 42 and 43 are locked in position and the welding operation carried through as described in relation to the conductor bar 20. After the weld is complete the arms 42 and 43 are retracted with respect to each other and are removed. This bar 4!] also may be used in welding successive pairs of fins within the tube l0 until a considerable number such as the eight shown in Figure I are secured therein.

Various changes and modifications may be made herein without departing from the scope of my invention. It is therefore to be understood that my patent is not limited to use of the preferred embodiments of the invention described herein, or in any manner other than the scope of the appended claims.

I claim:

1. Apparatus for welding a strip of material to the inside surface of a tubular member in a direction extending generally longitudinally thereof, comprising two oppositely disposed electrodes adapted to engage the exterior of the tubular member on opposite sides thereof, an elongated conductor member adapted to slide longitudinally within said tubular member and lie on a diam eter thereof and having a narrow edge adapted to engage the strip substantially only along the line of the intended weld, said conductor member having a width at the time the welding operation is carried out which together with the thickness of said strip exceeds the normal internal diameter of said tubular member whereby to hold said tubular member outwardly from its normal shape on one diameter while permitting the tubular member to deflect inwardly along other diameters, thereby holding said strip of material between the tubular member and said conductor member with a resilient grip in position for welding by the passage of an electrical current through said tubular member, said strip material, and said conductor member from one of said electrodes to the other.

2. Apparatus according to claim 1 in which the electrical resistance of said conductor member is less than that of said tubular member extending between said. electrodes.

3. Apparatus for welding a strip of material to the inside or" a tube by the application of the welding current, comprising two oppositely disposed electrodes adapted to engage the exterior of the tube on opposite sides thereof, a conductor member having a cruciform cross section comprising four arms aligned in pairs and adapted to slide within said tube member and to hold said strips of said material between the ends of the arms and the inner surfaces of the tube, each pair of aligned arms having a width which when added to the thickness of the strips of material held between said pair of arms and said tube, exceeds the internal diameter of said tube whereby to distort said tube outwardly from its normal shape and thereby resiliently holding said strips of material between said tube and said arms in position for welding to said tube by the passage of current from one electrode to the other through the tube, the strip material, and the conductor member.

4. Apparatus for welding a strip of material to the inside of a tubular member in a direction extending generally longitudinally thereof by the application of a welding current, comprising two oppositely disposed electrodes adapted to engage the exterior of said tubular member on opposite sides thereof, an elongated conductor member adapted to be inserted longitudinally within said tubular member and to hold said strip of material between said tubular member and said conductor member in a position for welding, said conductor member comprising a plurality of elements one of which has a narrow edge adapted to engage the strip substantially only along the line of the intended weld, said elements being mounted for movement relative to each other and radially with respect to said tubular member to engage said tubular member and distort the same outwardly from its normal shape along a diameter intersecting the line of the intended weld while permitting the tubular member to deflect inwardly along other diameters, whereby said strip of material and said conductor member are resiliently held by the tendency of said tubular member to return to its normal shape.

5. Apparatus according to claim 4 in which said elements comprising said conductor member are mounted for longitudinal movement relative to each other.

6. Apparatus according to claim 4 in which said conductor member elements have interlocking surfaces to hold the same against relative lateral movement.

7. Apparatus for welding a plurality of channel section fin members longitudinally along the inside surface of a tube comprising a pair of oppositely disposed electrode rolls adapted to engage the exterior of the tube on diametrically opposite sides thereof with the rolls lying in a plane parallel to the axis of the tube, an elongated conductor member adapted to slide longitudinally within said tubular member and lie on a diameter thereof in the plane of said electrode rolls, said conductor member having narrow edges adapted to be disposed Within said channel section fin members and to engage the bases of said channel section fin members along the lines of the intended welds and to hold said channel section fin members in engagement with the interior of the tube, said conductor member having a width which when added to the thickness of the bases of said channel section fin members slightly exceeds the internal diameter of said tube thereby distorting said tube outwardly from its normal shape along said diameter while permitting said tube to deflect inwardly along other diameters and thereby holding said channel section fin members in position for welding by the passage of welding current between said electrodes and through the walls of the tube, the bases of said channel section fin members and said conductor member.

JOHN W. BROWN, JR.

REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:

UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,096,506 Haskin May 12, 1914 1,564,892 Phelps Dec. 8, 1925 1,995,368 Sunnen Mar. 26, 1935 2,057,017 De Ganahl Oct. 13, 1936 

